“I think it goes back to having a positive role model, whether it’s yourself, other adults in your family, big sisters," McBee said. "Like with my girls, they watch my every move, they will mock everything I do.”

Bethani Rivera also has a 6-year-old daughter enrolled in the class.

Both mothers said they monitored the TV shows their daughters watched, but “it’s not just the TV shows,” Bethani said. “It’s the commercials, it’s advertisements that they see on Barbie Dolls, Bratz Dolls. It’s in our music. It’s everywhere. It’s shoved down their throats.”

Both of their daughters chose the sexy doll as being more popular but chose the modest doll as looking more like them.

Scott said there’s room for healthy sexual development in young girls, but the concern is that it’s happening at younger and younger ages.

He said the solution is not as simple as turning off the TV.

"Parents have the ability to use media, TV, movies, as a teachable moment, to talk about how that's not a good choice that person's making," he said, "or how that's not really an appropriate way to dress."